Believe it or not, the show this show reminds me most of is….Entourage.
Believe it or not, the show this show reminds me most of is….Entourage.
That's actually one of the best things about ASP. Wedding scenes are cliche and sappy and, when you actually think about it, pointless. What does a wedding scene tell the audience that they didn't already know?
- I thought this episode was very clearly trying to set up a dichotomy between the Michelle-Truly-Millie-Talia older foursome and the Bunhead quartet. And all eight of them (!) in this episode got a character moment, which is an amazing piece of writing and I think was the point of the whole quarantine plot device.
Maybe ABC Family will toy with the idea of putting it on at 10pm for one summer.
Terrific, terrific episode, much better than "War," which cheapened one of DC's best villains by making him so easy to defeat (honestly, that's how they take down Mongul?)
It's more like The Quibbler, complete with a permanent section devoted to the Department of Mysteries.
Tasha, even if you did manage to get yourself to Tokyo and hike your way to the Ghibli museum, they have a number of exclusive short films and show only one each day. You don't get to choose.
And I'm totally devastated.
- Apparently Bailey Buntain is a triple threat. This show is just insanely ambitious in what it asks its performers to do. Their audition process must have been: We have Sutton Foster, so you had better bring it.
"With the rise of two-income households, there were more and more kids
out there who couldn’t be bothered to do their homework until someone
made them, and an army of shows marched onto TV to entertain them"
I don't understand the hate for pantsuits. If you are a woman of middle class means with a professional demeanor and a modest disposition, what else are you going to wear?
They've now added Mongul into the show. Incredible. Mongul is a cool villain, but jeez at the rate this show adds characters, we're gonna have Brainiac, Darkseid, Hades and the entire New Genesis gods by the show's endpoint.
My Bowie would be Hunky Dory
Of Prince's albums, 1999 is my pick as well.
Stevie Wonder's Talking Book
Paul Dini works for Disney right now.
*looks around*
I think if we added up all of his screen time up until this point, it would equal something like 5 minutes. He literally comes on to swoon at Sasha for one minute intervals in each episode.
- What's weird about Sasha is that she was complaining all this time about how boring Paradise is and dreaming of leaving far away for college and escaping to ballet school - but when the chance to move falls out of the sky, she decides to stay.
"…and Let’s Hope She Turns Out Exceptionally Pretty’s Imogen Gay Poots,"